Self-Employed Borrower Basics Part I - Personal Tax Return Review October 2016 Genworth Mortgage Insurance Corporation 2016 Genworth Financial, Inc. All rights reserved.
Agenda Business Income Concepts Qualifying Income General Underwriting Guidelines Self-Employed Business Types IRS Form 1040 Personal Tax Return Profit and Loss Statement Income Analysis Forms Sole Proprietor Schedule C Adjustments to Income Non-reoccurring Income Depreciation Amortization Depletion Meals and Entertainment Genworth Resources 2
Business Income Concepts Four Concepts Business Income May Be Reported On Personal Tax Returns and/or Business Tax Returns Taxable Income Calculated on Tax Returns Income on Which Borrower Owes Taxes Qualifying Income Money Available to Pay Mortgage Taxed Income May Have Been Passed Through to The Borrower Taxed Income May Not Be Available Expensed Not Acknowledged Untaxed Income May Be Available Income Not Required To Be Reported As Taxable Non-Cash Expenses Computed in Calculation of Taxable Income 3
Business Income Concepts Four Concepts Examine Past to Predict Future 1 or 2 Year History With Documentation Calculations Shown Fannie Mae- Form 1084 Freddie Mac- Form 91 Lender Form MI Co. Form (Continues on Next Slide) 4
Qualifying Income The only income that can be used to qualify your borrower is income that is: Steady, Stable, Likely to Continue, and Provable. Generally: Two Year History Of Receipt, Three Year Continuance. Specific Income Types May Vary. 5
General Underwriting Guidelines Declining Personal Income Can the income be used to qualify? If so, use only the lower of the two years Declining Business Income Conduct a Trend Analysis Fannie Mae Comparative Income Form (Form 1088) Cheat sheet located on our training page @ mi.genworth.com Income Trend $157,000 $150,000 $150,000 $90,000 6
Self-Employed Business Types Each business structure reports taxes as follows: Sole Proprietor Completes IRS Form 1040 Schedule C Farm Completes IRS Form 1040 Schedule F (Continues on Next Slide) 7
Self-Employed Business Types Each business structure reports taxes as follows: Partnership Completes IRS Form 1065 Partners receive Form K-1s from the partnership reporting the partner s profit/loss IRS Form 1040 may reflect pass through income on B, C, D, E or F S-Corporation Completes IRS Form 1120S Shareholders receive Form K-1s from the S-Corp reporting the shareholder s profit/loss IRS Form 1040 may reflect pass through income on B, C, D, E or F Limited Liability Company An LLC may complete Partnership or Corp returns Single member, or husband/wife only may report on Form 1040, Schedule C Income analyzed based on form completed, not business type (Continued from previous slide) (Continues on Next Slide) 8
Self-Employed Business Types Each business structure reports taxes as follows: Corporation Completes IRS Form 1120. Shareholders may receive Wages reported on a W-2 Dividend reported on IRS Form 1040, Schedule B (Continued from previous slide) 9
IRS Form 1040- Individual Tax Return 2015 Tax Tables 10
What Taxable Activities Has Your Borrower Filed? This return shows two different types of income report: Taxable Interest Business Income Schedule C The presence of a schedule prompts the mortgage file reviewer to investigate the activity posted. 11
Show the Math Each schedule simply shows the math behind the sum that carried forward to the Form 1040. After reviewing the schedule you may determine that adjustments need to be made to the taxable income reported to convert it to qualifying income for loan purposes. 12
The Profit and Loss Statement What is it? Profit and Loss Statement (P&L) may also be referred to as The Income Statement or Earnings Statement The P&L Statement shows the total actions of a business over a period of time It may represent a month, a quarter or a year A 1040 Schedule C & F and A Business Tax Return (1065, 1120S, 1120) are all a form of a Income Statement 13
Income Statement/ P&L Definitions returns, NET SALES: The total dollar volume of all cash or credit sales less allowances, discounts and rebates. SOLD: COST OF GOODS For a retail or wholesale business it is the total price paid for the products sold plus the cost of having it delivered to the store during the accounting period For a manufacturing firm it is the beginning inventory plus purchases, delivery costs, material, labor, and overhead minus the ending inventory deducted. GROSS PROFIT: Profit before expenses and federal taxes have been wages, : EXPENSES The cost of doing business. It includes such items as: telephone, insurance, depreciation, interest and advertising. taxes. NET PROFIT: The amount left over after expenses plus interest and federal (Net profit is typically noted before paying federal taxes). 14
The Profit and Loss Statement/Income Statement It begins when a sale is made The first entry or account would be Sales. If the sale was $30,000 it would look like this: Sales $30,000 The next entry would be the Cost of Goods Sold. If the cost was $22,000 it would be subtracted to show the Gross Profit. Sales $30,000 Cost of Goods Sold ($22,000) Gross Profit $ 8,000 The next entries are the expenses connected to running the business. Expenses are either cash or accrued. 15
PROFIT AND LOSS STATEMENT Company XYZ January X Through March X, 20XX NET SALES (LESS ALLOWANCES AND DISCOUNTS COST OF GOODS SOLD GROSS PROFIT DRAWINGS (OWNERS) $ 74,000 WAGES 65,000 DELIVERY 7,000 BAD DEBT 4,000 TELEPHONE 2,000 DEPRECIATION 4,000 INSURANCE 7,000 TAXES (LOCAL) 8,000 INTEREST 8,700 ADVERTISING 3,000 *MISCELLANEOUS 2,000 TOTAL EXPENSES $184,700 $700,000 (500,000) 200,000 NET PROFIT (BEFORE FEDERAL TAXES) $15,300 Miscellaneous * - This line item may include: donations, office and shop supplies, occupancy expenses, credit card expenses, leasing, legal, accounting, computer services, dues and subscriptions, entertainment, laundry, disposal, employer benefits 16
Schedule C vs. Income Statement 17
Income Analysis Forms 18
Sole Proprietor Only one owner (100% ownership) Income reported on schedule C Taxed on personal rate Advantages Easy to form Inexpensive 100% ownership Disadvantages Unlimited personal liability Unable to raise large sums of money to invest in business 19
Income Analysis Calculator Genworth Calculators 20
Adjustments To The Income Common sense guides us through most of the adjustments. If a business received income/revenue in the past tax year but was NOT expected to receive it in future years, can you rely on it to be a source of income for the borrower to make mortgage payments with? 21
Adjustments To The Income Common sense guides us through most of the adjustments. If a business has acknowledged an expense that is considered a noncash expense or a paper loss does the business still have the cash to be a source of income for the borrower to make mortgage payments with? 22
Depreciation Depreciation is an accounting method of allocating the cost of a tangible asset over its useful life. Businesses depreciate long-term assets for both tax and accounting purposes. For tax purposes, businesses can deduct the cost of the tangible assets they purchase as business expenses; however, businesses must depreciate these assets in accordance with IRS rules about how and when the deduction may be taken. A taxpayer must use Form 4562, Depreciation and Amortization, to report depreciation on a tax return. 23
Property Classifications For Depreciation Example of straight line depreciation Purchase Price of Race Horse $20,000 Placed in Service Jan 1st 2015 Depreciation Book Value Accumulated Depreciation 1st Year write-off $6,666.66 $13,333 $6,666 2nd Year write-off $6,666.66 $6,666 $13,333 3rd Year write-off $6,666.66 $0 $20,000 1. 3-year property a. Tractor units for over-the-road use b. Any race horse over 2 years old when placed in service. (All race horses placed in service after December 31, 2008, and before January 1, 2017 are deemed to be 3-year property, regardless of age.) c. Any other horse (other than a race horse) over 12 years old when placed in service d. Qualified rent-to-own property (defined later) 24
Property Classifications For Depreciation 2. 5-year property a. Automobiles, taxis, buses, and trucks b. Computers and peripheral equipment c. Office machinery (such as typewriters, calculators, and copiers d. Any property used in research and experimentation e. Breeding cattle and dairy cattle f. Appliances, carpets, furniture, etc. used in a residential rental real estate activity g. Certain geothermal, solar, and wind energy property 25
Property Classifications For Depreciation 3. 7-year property a. Office furniture and fixtures (such as desks, files, and safes) b. Agricultural machinery and equipment c. Railroad track d. Any property that does not have a class life and has not been designated by law as being in any other class e. Certain motorsports entertainment complex property (defined later) placed in service before January 1, 2017 26
Depreciation And Amortization Worksheet The worksheet allows the mortgage file reviewer the asset that was considered. 27
Section 179, Essentially Section 179 of the IRS tax code allows businesses to deduct the full purchase price of qualifying equipment and/or software purchased or financed during the tax year. equipment, That means that if you buy (or lease) a piece of qualifying you can deduct the FULL PURCHASE PRICE from your gross income. It's an incentive created by the U.S. government to encourage businesses to buy equipment and invest in themselves. 28
Depreciation The loss of value to an asset due to wear and tear. A cost of doing business. A non-cash expense. + Underwriting guideline: add it back! 29
Amortization Amortization is a method of recovering (deducting) certain capital costs over a fixed period of time. It is similar to the straight line method of depreciation. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) allows taxpayers to take a deduction for certain amortized expenses: Geological and geophysical expenses incurred in oil and natural gas exploration Atmospheric pollution control facilities Bond premiums Research and development Lease acquisition Forestation and reforestation Certain intangibles such as goodwill, patents, copyrights and trademarks 30
Amortization The depreciation of an intangible asset. Goodwill Trade Marks Copy Rights Patents A non-cash expense. + Underwriting guideline: add it back! 31
Depletion Depletion is the using up of natural resources by mining, quarrying, drilling, or cutting. The depletion deduction allows an owner or operator to account for the reduction of a product's reserves. 32
Depletion The using up of a natural resource. Coal Timber Gas A cost of doing business. A non-cash expense. + Underwriting guideline: add it back! 33
Adjustments To The Income Common sense guides us through most of the adjustments. If a business has not acknowledged an expense but the expense resulted in a cash outlay from the business does the business still have the cash to be a source for the borrower to make mortgage payments with? 34
Meals And Entertainment Expenses = Enjoyment Tax To qualify for a business expense the business owner would need to be present. Meals Your borrower had to eat anyway! Entertainment Your Borrower had a Really good time! Regardless of the amount of people present, your borrower ate 50% and had a good time. Gary took 10 clients to a show and dinner. The check came to $2,700, Gary can write off $1,350. Reduce income by line 24c 35
Taxable Income + Paper Write-Offs + Untaxed Income + Losses Not Continuing - Taxed Income Not Available - Income Not Expected To Continue Estimated Cash Available To Pay Mortgage In The Future 36
Let s Calculate Income Together 37
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